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Les Temps modernes

Original title: Modern Times
  • 1936
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 27m
IMDb RATING
8.5/10
276K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
3,281
38
Les Temps modernes (1936)
The Tramp struggles to live in modern industrial society with the help of a young homeless woman.
Play trailer1:13
1 Video
99+ Photos
Romantic ComedySatireSlapstickComedyDramaRomance

The Tramp struggles to live in modern industrial society with the help of a young homeless woman.The Tramp struggles to live in modern industrial society with the help of a young homeless woman.The Tramp struggles to live in modern industrial society with the help of a young homeless woman.

  • Director
    • Charles Chaplin
  • Writer
    • Charles Chaplin
  • Stars
    • Charles Chaplin
    • Paulette Goddard
    • Henry Bergman
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.5/10
    276K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    3,281
    38
    • Director
      • Charles Chaplin
    • Writer
      • Charles Chaplin
    • Stars
      • Charles Chaplin
      • Paulette Goddard
      • Henry Bergman
    • 417User reviews
    • 140Critic reviews
    • 96Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Top rated movie #50
    • Awards
      • 6 wins & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:13
    Trailer

    Photos135

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    Top cast44

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    Charles Chaplin
    Charles Chaplin
    • A Factory Worker
    • (as Charlie Chaplin)
    Paulette Goddard
    Paulette Goddard
    • A Gamin
    Henry Bergman
    Henry Bergman
    • Cafe Proprietor
    Tiny Sandford
    Tiny Sandford
    • Big Bill
    • (as Stanley Sandford)
    Chester Conklin
    Chester Conklin
    • Mechanic
    Hank Mann
    Hank Mann
    • Burglar
    Stanley Blystone
    Stanley Blystone
    • Gamin's Father
    Al Ernest Garcia
    Al Ernest Garcia
    • President of the Electro Steel Corp.
    • (as Allan Garcia)
    Richard Alexander
    Richard Alexander
    • Prison Cellmate
    • (as Dick Alexander)
    Cecil Reynolds
    • Minister
    Mira McKinney
    Mira McKinney
    • Minister's Wife
    • (as Myra McKinney)
    Murdock MacQuarrie
    Murdock MacQuarrie
    • J. Widdecombe Billows
    • (as Murdoch McQuarrie)
    Wilfred Lucas
    Wilfred Lucas
    • Juvenile Officer
    Edward LeSaint
    Edward LeSaint
    • Sheriff Couler
    • (as Ed Le Sainte)
    Fred Malatesta
    Fred Malatesta
    • Cafe Head Waiter
    Sammy Stein
    Sammy Stein
    • Turbine Operator
    • (as Sam Stein)
    Juana Sutton
    • Woman with Buttoned Bosom
    Ted Oliver
    • Billows' Assistant
    • Director
      • Charles Chaplin
    • Writer
      • Charles Chaplin
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews417

    8.5275.6K
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    Summary

    Reviewers say 'Modern Times' by Charlie Chaplin is a satirical comedy critiquing industrialization and capitalism during the Great Depression. Key themes include the dehumanizing effects of technology, working-class struggles, and the search for happiness. Memorable scenes feature the factory sequence, automatic feeding machine, and roller-skating scene. Chaplin's first spoken words add humor and mark a transition from silent films. The relationship between Chaplin's Tramp and Goddard's Gamin highlights love, resilience, and the human spirit, providing a poignant counterpoint to the industrial satire.
    AI-generated from the text of user reviews

    Featured reviews

    9gogoschka-1

    As relevant today as it was then - and still very funny

    Part satire, part slapstick comedy, part melodrama; the great pioneer of film, Charles Chaplin, has created his own monument with this film. At the same time, 'Modern Times' was Chaplin's last goodbye to the era of silent film - which, remarkably, had already ended almost a decade earlier.

    After nearly 80 years, this screen marvel still makes me laugh, cry - and think about the ongoing automatization of practically every trivial little thing in our lives. Modern times, indeed.

    To me, this film is as entertaining and funny today as I imagine it was then, and it's certainly as relevant as it was then.

    The tramp still rules. My vote: 9 out of 10.

    Favorite films: http://www.IMDb.com/list/mkjOKvqlSBs/

    Lesser-known Masterpieces: http://www.imdb.com/list/ls070242495/

    Favorite Low-Budget and B-Movies: http://www.imdb.com/list/ls054808375/

    Favorite TV-Shows reviewed: http://www.imdb.com/list/ls075552387/
    8Xstal

    In the Pursuit of Happiness...

    Never a dull moment with the vagrant antics of Mr Charlie Chaplin as he seeks to impress on his audience the impact of living in the modern era. What would the little man make of the world today, as technology continues its drive to remove people from the workplace and replace them with more and more automation (who can blame them during pandemic times). A timeless classic that is perfectly geared, engaged and enmeshed for the unstoppable onslaught of technology and its perpetual modernisation - happiness beckons.
    8ma-cortes

    Charles Chaplin masterpiece finds him playing a factory worker who becomes involved in problems and strikes

    This mostly silent movie deals with a little man , a disgraced factory worker who goes insane from his repetitious job at an assembly líne . At the same time the exigent boss demands him for greatest efficiency and speed at work . As the unfortunate man moving from hapless factory worker to singing waiter and ultimately triumphing along the way .

    An interesting and thought-provoking Chaplin film encompassing the tyranny of Machine over man, this great film has more relevance nowadays than ever. The pic contains a sour denounce on capitalism , industrialization and human explotiation . This is a vintage flick much in the fashion that sound films offended his pantomimist's sensibilities . This is a silent movie , being the only dialogue a song sung by Chaplin in gibberish Italian .Chaplin gives an awesome and sympathetic performance as a labourer who goes crazy and triumphs over adversity , just as Charles the film director proved victorious over sound . Chaplin also composed the score which incorporates the charming tune : Smile. His spouse to be Paulette Goddard is attractive in the femenine lead , playing a poor orphan. Look for a young Gloria de Haven , as one of Paulette Goddard's Sisters . She is the real-life daughter of Chaplin's assistant director .

    The motion picture was masterfully directed by Charles Chaplin .This was one of the longest ones to that date . Chaplin previously directed 2 or 3 reel short movies, such as : Our hero, The fireman, Night at the show , The adventurer, The floorwalker, The cure , The inmigrant , The circus , Burlesque on Carmen , among others . After that , he made long feature films such as : The gold Rush , The kid , City lights , The great dictator , Monseur Verdoux , Limelight, A king of New York and his last one : A countess from Hong Kong . Rating 8/10 . Better than average . Well worth watching .
    8Horror-yo

    Excellent

    This very well written story never lets down from the very first image we see, flocking sheep compared with rushing urban human crowds, to the very ending. Excellent criticism of the Taylorism/capitalistic through humor relevant for any age, nationality or time; story-telling that would touch anyone alike in a universal fashion, every now and then sparkled with Chaplin's unique and deeply influential sense of humor and on-screen comedy. Hilarious in moments, and unique. A man of many talents clearly, and excellent at those. Overall this depicts quite a zany approach to life, one that is pure in essence and profoundly antagonistic with the current ways of the time, and ways of today still: a life dominated by one-track thinking, rigid and stubborn social etiquette, and the enslavement this new world has brought in so many aspects to the human species. Finally, it highlights the importance of never giving up; EVER; and the preciousness of love.
    10bkrauser-81-311064

    Still a Modern Classic

    We like to think that comedy has evolved since the time of silent film. We like to think that with the advent of sound and the injection of modern technology in all aspects of film production has made just about everything better. Indeed, it's hard to argue that so much of today's fun and farce just can't exist without a sound mixer and a few boom mics laying around. Ask yourself, if you put The 40-Year-Old Virgin (2005) or The Hangover (2009) on mute, would you really get anything out of it?

    By 1936, sound had long taken the film industry by storm. In fact, if you listen closely to the moment Al Jolson uttered "You ain't heard nothing' yet," in The Jazz Singer (1927), you may have heard the careers of many shattering in earnest. Never has there been a piece of technology so seamlessly adapted to an industry before or since. To name the number of noteworthy films made after 1929 that were silent would be to name perhaps a dozen.

    Yet with this adoption came growing pains. The cumbersome size of the Photokinema sound-on-disc machines and their components meant cameras had to stay bolted down. Actors had to not wonder too far from the mic or worse still, find a way to wear several pounds of bulky microphones under their garments. What once were dreams, stitched together by editing cuts became pale imitations of stage plays. The grammar of film essentially took two steps back.

    Seeing this, silent era superstar Charlie Chaplin decided to stem the tide. In 1931, he directed, produced and starred in City Lights, a romantic masterpiece of stagecraft and pantomime that to this day is one of the best examples of the beauty we lost. Seeing the writing on the wall by 1936, Chaplin decided to give the Tramp one last hurrah before retiring the character. One last bow before the tendrils of technology transforms his career into a shadow of its former self.

    Modern Times is at once one last bow, one last look at innocence lost and one glorious masterpiece of cinema. In it, Charlie's lovable Tramp struggles to adapt to a modern technological age while causing light-hearted mayhem everywhere he goes. Throughout the film he tries to conform to working as a security guard, a longshoreman, a factory worker, a mechanic etc. yet his peculiarity prevents him from being at a work site for too long. During his struggles he befriends an woman named Ellen (Goddard) who aids him in his quest for fulfilling work. They of course, fall in love in the chaste innocent way that couples did in the films of the time.

    Modern Times is infamous, for among other things, a soundtrack that includes the earworm "Smile" composed by Chaplin himself. The most famous cover was crooned by Nat King Cole whose astringent voice had the poorly covered scars of a life harshly lived. "Smile" to Modern Times is perfect; both as a bittersweet anthem and as addition to the American songbook. It perfectly captures the Tramp's uneasy monachopsis while hanging onto a buoyant hope of finding purpose. It's at times sad, at times triumphant but always life-affirming.

    Modern Times is also known for large, unique and detail filled comic set-pieces that despite being around for eighty years still coaxes laughter. One after another, these moments capture the absurdities of industrial life no other film does. Whether it be Chaplin toiling over a conveyor belt of widgets or literally being engulfed by a mechanical do-dad, He always has the perfect expression to reaffirm his humanity in the most inhuman of situations. It's pitch-perfect pantomime done by a true master of the craft.

    Of course, being the film advertised as "the one where The Tramp speaks," Modern Times does succumb to the encroachment of sound. And unlike in City Lights, Chaplin decides to inject it as part of a large theme as opposed to a target of mockery. The film is book- ended by two moments of sound, the first of which is his factory boss yelling at him through a large projected screen. "Get back to work!" he yells while the Tramp struggles to find a moment of respite. The inclusion of sound as an oppressor, even a personified one is an effective means of identification. Those who have heard the phrase "If you have time to lean, you have time to clean," will no doubt sympathize with Chaplin's character in that particular moment in time.

    The second time sound is used, is to affirm Chaplin's Tramp as a unique individual amid a crowd of onlookers. Late in the film, Ellen finds a job for the Tramp at a restaurant as a singing waiter. Right before his debut, he struggles to remember the words of the song he's to sing. He decides to put the lyrics on his detachable cuffs. Invariably, he looses the cuffs and, thinking quickly, begins to sing in gibberish. It's a prank pulled on audiences clamoring for the Tramp to finally speak on screen, yet it's one that's so incongruously Chaplin that one can't help but admire it.

    With Chaplin having a hand in every aspect of the film's production, one can write an entire book fawning over the exploits of a genius so ahead of his time, we still feel his influence. Modern Times showcases that genius, filling the celluloid with beauty, pathos, humor and humanity. Years after most of today's contemporary comedies fade into obscurity, those centuries from now will still fondly remember Charlie and his lovable Tramp. I guarantee it.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      (at around 48 mins) Sir Charles Chaplin devoted eight days to filming the department store roller-skating scene where he skates blindfolded on the edge of the fourth floor, coming within inches of falling over the edge into the deep stairwell below. The dangerous large drop was actually a painted scene on a pane of glass carefully placed in front of the camera to align with the existing set and create the illusion of great height.
    • Goofs
      After the Gamin's sisters are taken away, there is no further mention of them or of the Gamin's concern (or lack of) for her sisters.
    • Quotes

      A gamin: [Last lines] What's the use of trying?

      A factory worker: Buck up - never say die. We'll get along!

    • Alternate versions
      The said 33 seconds last minute removal is this: "After the girl takes the diamond from the fat man, she had it checked and she found out that it was a fake diamond."
    • Connections
      Featured in Por primera vez (1967)
    • Soundtracks
      Hallelujah, I'm a Bum
      (uncredited)

      Music from the traditional folk song "Revive Us Again"

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    FAQ

    • How long is Modern Times?Powered by Alexa
    • What is the song the tramp performs about?
    • What is a gamin?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 13, 1936 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Instagram
      • Official Site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Tiempos modernos
    • Filming locations
      • Sierra Hwy. & Penman Rd., Santa Clarita, California, USA(Ending-The Road)
    • Production company
      • Charles Chaplin Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $1,500,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $163,577
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $35,809
      • Dec 28, 2003
    • Gross worldwide
      • $463,618
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 27 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Silent
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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